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Samuel Tombs

@samueltombs

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Chief US Economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics.

London
Joined April 2009
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@samueltombs
Samuel Tombs
10 months
Thrilled to formally become Chief US Economist at Pantheon Macro today. @IanShepherdson has been an incredible mentor since I switched focus from the UK in Feb. I look forward to maintaining Pantheon’s reputation for incisive research on the US economy, supported by Oliver Allen.
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@samueltombs
Samuel Tombs
2 days
CPI and PPI data imply that the core PCE deflator rose by 0.28% in June. That's below our post-CPI estimate (0.35%) due to a relatively muted rise in portfolio management charges and a further fall in airline fares. But it's still consistent with a material boost from the tariffs
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@samueltombs
Samuel Tombs
3 days
Looking forward to the update to this report following the June CPI data.
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MAGA Resource
9 days
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@samueltombs
Samuel Tombs
3 days
That settles it: the tariffs are inflationary (amazing it was ever a question). Big increases in June in prices for goods, like toys, sports equipment and appliances, that are mostly imported. Prices for exempt goods (drugs, cell phones) flat or falling. Worse to come in July.
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@samueltombs
Samuel Tombs
8 days
The drop in initial claims last week was driven by states with relatively large auto sectors. The timing of annual shutdowns for retooling varies every year, leading to swings in claims at this time of the year which are simply noise. Expect claims to rise again over coming weeks.
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@samueltombs
Samuel Tombs
8 days
RT @PantheonMacro: "The tariff boost to consumer prices will be undeniable in June's data" @samueltombs #PantheonMa….
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@samueltombs
Samuel Tombs
15 days
Baffling to see Treasury yields up on the basis of seasonal adjustment issues with education payrolls and noise in the poorly-estimated unemployment rate. The key news is the further slowdown in growth in private payrolls, excluding health and education. The tariffs are hurting:
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@samueltombs
Samuel Tombs
16 days
RT @ollyallenecon: ADP employment is pretty useless at the best of times, but the 33K fall in June looks especially implausible. The big dr….
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@samueltombs
Samuel Tombs
21 days
RT @ollyallenecon: The 0.4% drop in personal incomes looks scary, but this is just volatility in the social security component as the boost….
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@samueltombs
Samuel Tombs
22 days
Continuing jobless claims are now clearly picking up, consistent with the unemployment rate rising to 4.3% in June, from 4.2% in May. Leading indicators of hiring and firing point to a faster increase over coming months. The Fed pivot is not far off.
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@samueltombs
Samuel Tombs
24 days
The US unemployment rate will hit the FOMC's end year forecast of 4.5% about six months early, if the Conference Board's indicator of job availability is right:
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@samueltombs
Samuel Tombs
29 days
A slight hawkish pivot in the Fed's dots - but don't forget the median participant expected last June to ease by 25bp in 2024, much less than the 100bp ultimately delivered. We still look for 75bp easing this year, as the unemployment rate rises faster than the FOMC expects.
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@samueltombs
Samuel Tombs
30 days
RT @ollyallenecon: Ugly headline housing starts number today mostly due to the extreme volatility in MF starts, but real signs under the ho….
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@samueltombs
Samuel Tombs
1 month
RT @ollyallenecon: Increasingly hard to claim that the uptick in claims we've seen lately just reflects residual seasonality, particularly….
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@samueltombs
Samuel Tombs
1 month
CPI and PPI data imply the core PCE deflator rose by just 0.12% in May, but that will be the last benign print for a while. Inventories are running low and some volatile services components (inc. portfolio management) will rebound. Brace for 0.3-to-0.4% prints in June and July.
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@samueltombs
Samuel Tombs
1 month
Some isolated examples of tariff-driven rises in US consumer prices in May - prices for appliances and toys leapt - but in general we are still not seeing a substantial impulse. It's early days though - past experience suggests goods price rises will accelerate this summer.
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@samueltombs
Samuel Tombs
1 month
The pattern of downward revisions to payrolls, as more data are collected, has re-emerged with a vengeance. The 104K downward revision to estimated payroll growth in March between the 1st & 3rd estimates is the largest for 4 years. May's print will be c.100K after revisions.
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@samueltombs
Samuel Tombs
2 months
RT @ollyallenecon: Anyone suggesting the massive fall in the trade deficit in April is a "win" or a sign that "tariffs are working" is a cl….
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@samueltombs
Samuel Tombs
2 months
April's US import price data are an early blow to hopes that overseas businesses will lower their prices in response to the tariffs. Prices for nonfuel imports, which are measured before tariffs and shipping costs have been applied, rose 0.4% in April.
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@samueltombs
Samuel Tombs
2 months
We're tracking a 0.12% increase in the April core PCE deflator after today's PPI data (little changed from our post-CPI estimate of 0.11%). As expected, portfolio management prices plunged and airfares were weak. Another good print from the Fed's perspective.
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@samueltombs
Samuel Tombs
2 months
We're tracking a 0.11% increase in the core PCE deflator after the CPI data. The contribution from CPI components will be in line with the 12-month average, but we expect big falls in the PPIs for air travel and portfolio management fees. The FOMC can expect another good print.
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